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Coffee before the service works well where I am hanging out these days. This is the first church I have seen do it this way & it has some advantages.
When we have discussed this on previous occasions we have heard that an earlier time works best for folks who come by bus from retirement homes.
11:00 is still my preference because I grew up with this time for church. And church was always an hour long with the service running a little longer when we had baptisms or communion. I find myself still in favour of this.
Lots of factors to consider!
Oddly, I don't think I have ever attended a church that started as late as 11. My family church might have when they had two services but that's when I was little so I don't remember it well other than Dad sometimes having to go early (we normally went to the later service but he sometimes had to be at the early one for something or other). By the time I really remember going, it was one service at 10:30.
One of my friends is a church planter in downtown Toronto. His church worships Sunday afternoons at 4pm. There's another church that rents my church's building for services, and they worship Sundays at 3pm. There are lots of churches in Toronto that offer services on both Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings. And then there are the Seventh Day Adventists.
The "megachurch" (well, as close as you'll get to one in London) I pass en route to work has 4 on Sunday and 1 on Saturday evening. They have people directing traffic in their parking lot and an off duty cop managing traffic on the street. I have been tempted to go just to see what it is like but a couple perusals of their website have convinced me it ain't for this ape.
It's a big dream for a church that now has 17 members.
Worship today at my sister's church. They were recognizing the youth particularly those who will be graduating from Junior to Senior High and those graduating Senior High. Also, an interesting play with kids and some adults playing the role of trees and talking of their dreams and then seeing where they ended up after the woodcutters arrived on the scene. One ended up as a manager and another as a cross and another as fishers boat.
Yes I did mean manger. Mind you I have worked for a few wooden managers through the years.I assume you meant "manger"?
I've always found these sorts of plays a bit hokey. I love symbolism and metaphor as much as the next guy but these chancel plays kind of shove it in your face IME.
Ended up going to my regular church with family. There was a "game show performance with three Moms and their young child. The mothers were asked to leave the stage while the kids were asked 3 questions about their Mom's. When the Moms came back on stage they had to pick which answers were the ones their child gave. The one with the most correct answers won a prize. It's true.....kids say the darndest things.....it was funny.
We also had a guest speaker, a woman from another church. She spoke about the greatest gift that a mother can give her children is to teach them how to love God through example and speaking about God's place in our everyday life.
We also had a bit of fun with 7 gift certificates hidden under some seats for the Moms....gifts included chocolates, Epicure package, spa package, flowers.....
A photo booth was placed in front of the coffee shop area with props such as different funny hats, large glasses, wigs, so you could take a picture with your Mother and the pictures were immediately sent to your phone or email or FB.
A local business also made cotton candy to be handed to all the Moms after the service.
Absolutely, this minister is very keen on bringing in young families with whatever it takes....I don't always agree.......BUT he does have some controversial ideas that seem to work. eg. he embraces the non believer , even as someone who is able to participate within the church very quickly ....as ushers, offering plates, music ministry, working in the cafe, etc.....Sounds, save the guest speaker, more like a Mother's Day performance than a service.
I have been going to Quaker meetings these last few weeks. They do not have a minister, they don't have music, or pre-prayed prayers, and no creed. They believe that everybody has "an inner teacher", to which you connect by listening to "him" as well as listening to the wisdom which is spoken in the group during the meeting. Nobody gives advice, but respects what others say. I find a lot more insight and wisdom in a Quaker meeting than in a worship where someone directs messages or prayers in hopes of a certain outcome. After a reading- which often is just randomly out of their book, there could be one hour of silence or several people speaking their thoughts.
I have known Quakers over the years but never been to one of their meetings. It would probably be an experience worth having at some point.
There are Quaker meetings and Quaker meetings. Some modern Quaker meetings are very evangelical in style. If you attended one, you might feel like you were in a Baptist service.
I was thinking more of the traditional style that Mrs. Anteater describes but I have heard of the modern ones.